Deep Learning in Haskell
Go to file
Erik de Castro Lopo c719fe0df8 Add .gitignore
2016-06-29 20:24:06 +10:00
lib Initial commit 2016-06-24 13:20:36 +10:00
main Initial commit 2016-06-24 13:20:36 +10:00
src Replace licence in cabal file 2016-06-28 09:32:16 +10:00
test Initial commit 2016-06-24 13:20:36 +10:00
.gitignore Add .gitignore 2016-06-29 20:24:06 +10:00
.gitmodules .gitmodules: Use https for submodules 2016-06-28 20:50:14 +10:00
grenade.cabal grenade.cabal: Specify BSD2 to match the LICENSE file 2016-06-28 22:08:45 +10:00
LICENSE Rename NOTICE.txt to LICENSE 2016-06-28 10:25:58 +08:00
mafia Upgrade mafia 2016-06-28 20:51:07 +10:00
README.md State that it's dependently typed in the README 2016-06-27 14:29:41 +10:00

Grenade

First shalt thou take out the Holy Pin, then shalt thou count to three, no more, no less.
Three shall be the number thou shalt count, and the number of the counting shall be three.
Four shalt thou not count, neither count thou two, excepting that thou then proceed to three.
Five is right out.

💣 Machine learning which might blow up in your face 💣

Grenade is a dependently typed, practical, and pretty quick neural network library for concise and precise specifications of complex networks in Haskell.

As an example, a network which can achieve less than 1.5% error on mnist can be specified and initialised with random weights in under 10 lines of code with

randomMnistNet :: MonadRandom m => m (Network Identity '[('D2 28 28), ('D3 24 24 10), ('D3 12 12 10), ('D3 12 12 10), ('D3 8 8 16), ('D3 4 4 16), ('D1 256), ('D1 256), ('D1 80), ('D1 80), ('D1 10), ('D1 10)])
randomMnistNet = do
  a :: Convolution 1 10 5 5 1 1  <- randomConvolution
  let b :: Pooling 2 2 2 2        = Pooling
  c :: Convolution 10 16 5 5 1 1 <- randomConvolution
  let d :: Pooling 2 2 2 2        = Pooling
  e :: FullyConnected 256 80     <- randomFullyConnected
  f :: FullyConnected 80  10     <- randomFullyConnected
  return $ a :~> b :~> Relu :~> c :~> d :~> FlattenLayer :~> Relu :~> e :~> Logit :~> f :~> O Logit

The network can be thought of as a heterogeneous list of layers, and its type signature includes a type level list of the shapes of the data passed between the layers of the network.

In the above example, the input layer can be seen to be a two dimensional (D2) image with 28 by 28 pixels. The last item in the list is one dimensional (D1) with 10 values, representing the categories of the mnist data.

Layers in Grenade are represented as Haskell classes, so creating one's own is easy in downstream code. If the shapes of a network are not specified correctly and a layer can not sensibly perform the operation between two shapes, then it will result in a compile time error.

Thanks

Writing a library like this has been on my mind for a while now, but a big shout out must go to Justin Le, whose dependently typed fully connected network inspired me to get cracking, gave many ideas for the type level tools I needed, and was a great starting point for writing this library.

Performance

Grenade is backed by hmatrix and blas, and uses a pretty clever convolution trick popularised by Caffe, which is surprisingly effective and fast. So for many small scale problems it should be sufficient.

That said, it's currently stuck on a single core and doesn't hit up the GPU, so there's a fair bit of performance sitting there begging.

Training 15 generations over Kaggle's mnist training data took a few hours.

Contributing

Contributions are welcome.